About

About the site

Welcome to my site! It debuted in March 2002 and was completely redesigned in November 2012. This site is for the serious collector of vintage Halloween memorabilia, and for those wanting to learn more about this fun hobby. It is my hope that you’ll find this a worthwhile destination to bookmark, as the content will be updated frequently. Enjoy your time here!

Click here to learn more about my third edition reference, the hobby's bible.

About Mark B. Ledenbach

I have been an enthusiastic Halloween collector and curator since 1988, opening my wallet wide to assemble a fine and extensive collection of vintage memorabilia. My focus has been to acquire examples of the rarest German and American vintage items in the best condition possible. Although I like all genres except the still over-priced hard plastic segment, I generally don’t collect postcards, costumes, common pulp, German JOLs or items made after about 1965.

I have a strong interest in understanding when pieces were made, which commercial firms actually produced items, and what marks were used through the decades. With the alarming level of reproductions and fantasy pieces on today's market, education - not merely trust - will steer you to safer harbors. Because of my strong inclination for research and understanding the changing nature of Halloween design over time, I was dubbed "The Dean of Halloween" by a prominent writer in the collectibles field.

I've been fortunate to have my collection profiled in the media many times. Print profiles have appeared in Flea Market Decor, Antiques & Collecting Magazine, Country Home, Mary Engelbreit's Home Companion, Celebrate365, Country Sampler, Country Living, The Antique Trader and Toy Shop, etc. as well as numerous newspapers throughout the United States and Canada.

I have been a featured guest on Harold Nicholl's radio program, The Collectors Show. I was also quoted by Giaco Furino in his article on our hobby on Vice.com.

I appeared as an expert appraiser on a 2014 episode of American Pickers, having the true pleasure of meeting and filming with Danielle Colby. This experience was a true delight. The name of the episode is A Hard Rain is Gonna Fall.

I spoke about several items from my collection on the Martha Stewart Show. The nearly 10 minute segment was originally broadcast in October of 2008 and is available on YouTube.

Pieces from the collection, as well as my comments on the hobby overall, appeared on the PBS series, Antiques Roadshow FYI, in early May of 2005. The collection was also shown on Home and Garden Television’s (HGTV's) nationally broadcast show, Collectible Treasures, in July of 2003.

I have also been the credited official advisor for the vintage Halloween section for the Warman's Antiques & Collectibles Price Guide since 2008.

Given my proclivities for true research, I am quite excited about the greatly expanded and fully revised third edition of Vintage Halloween Collectibles: An Identification and Price Guide, released in June 2014. (The first edition was released in June 2003. The second edition was released in June 2007 with its DVD Supplement accompanying it in 2010.)

Halloween collectors are among the nicest group of people I know. I have met scores of interesting and enthusiastic collectors, and have been fortunate to have been given access to their collections. In turn, I enjoy sharing my knowledge with other collectors, and encourage you to contact me with any questions or comments you might have. For a list of frequently asked questions, please go to the FAQ section of the website.

A Brief History of Halloween Collectibles

I innocently stumbled into the world
of collecting vintage Halloween memorabilia in the 1980s. I was in a local
store, Blue Eagle Antiques, when the proprietor asked if I would help her move
out several boxes containing old Halloween decorations for her seasonal
displays. Being curious I went and opened up the boxes and was dazzled by the
strong imagery found on those vintage pieces. Instantly hooked, I recall writing
a check for nearly $350.00 that day, which bought quite a lot from those boxes!
Among my first purchases was a complete set of eight of the early 1940s
Beistle's (HE Luhrs’ mark) black cat die-cut band for $16.00. Those were indeed
the days!

I was fortunate to have started collecting Halloween when I
did. This “Golden Age” of relative plenty, coupled with low prices and quizzical
looks from shopkeepers when asked about the availability of vintage Halloween in
months other than October, lasted until about 1995. Being an avid collector, I
was able to amass a nice assortment of material priced quite reasonably during
this interlude. Then, in 1995, the first references devoted solely to Halloween
collectibles were published. The first was “Halloween in America” written by
Stuart Schneider. The second was “Halloween Collectables” written by Dan/Pauline
Campanelli. These works contributed greatly to the meager knowledge base
available to Halloween collectors at the time. Once these were published, prices
- already on a fairly steep trajectory since 1991 - truly exploded.

Halloween, as a commonly celebrated US event, truly came into its own in
the very early 1920s. Parties then were primarily for adults, with guests
settling in to play mahjong, bridge or other games. Tables and walls would be
decorated with a wide array of Halloween-themed items, really setting the
party’s mood. The games’ winners would be given prizes to take home, like candy
containers, lanterns or noisemakers. Only later did “trick or treating” come
into vogue, with the holiday becoming then more firmly oriented toward children.
I tend to savor those items made in the interlude before Halloween became so
child-focused.

Halloween is the quintessential American holiday,
although many of the most prized items today were manufactured in Germany. How
did this come about? After World War I, Germany was devastated by the follies of
their own foreign policy but hampered in its recovery efforts by the Versailles
Treaty. Forced to pay reparations to the victorious allies for the devastation
of WWI, an outlet earlier used assumed greater importance. Several American
discount-merchandising magnates like Frank W. Woolworth and Sebastian S. Kresge
more strongly encouraged German artisans at this time to use their creative
expertise to craft unique and wondrous items for export to the vast and growing
American holiday market. What I consider to be the zenith of German Halloween
production in terms of variety and design is from ~1919 until 1935, when the
expansive tendencies of the new German Reich brought this kind of trade to a
close, not to resume until after the partition in the late 1940s. We shouldn’t
think of the German production of Halloween memorabilia from this early
era in modern terms. Many, if not all, of the lanterns, candy containers and
figurals were made in homes or very small firms, from either a fixed design or a
mold, and all hand decorated. The overall quantity of items produced was quite
small given the conditions present at the time of their creation.

There
were two premier American die-cut and party supply manufacturers from this era:
the Beistle Company of Shippensburg, Pennsylvania and the Dennison Manufacturing
Company of Framingham, Massachusetts. Both are still in business today. Many
collectors will note a mark on some of the better die-cuts from about 1940
through the early 1950s as “H.E. Luhrs.” The Beistle Company exclusively used
this mark. Mr. Luhrs worked his way up through the firm, becoming president of
Beistle in 1941. Beistle was known for making very detailed paper die-cuts,
lanterns and table items. They were made in smaller quantities and are much
desired by today’s collectors. Although often not marked, the Beistle imagery
and design are certain indicators of their origin.

One thing I truly
thank Dennison for was their nearly always annual publication of their Halloween
Bogie Books. Beginning in 1909 and continuing through the mid 1930s (later
incarnations were sized and titled differently – but all followed the same
format), these magazines served as the primary sales and marketing tool for
Dennison’s Halloween products. For today’s collectors they serve an entirely
different purpose altogether: a primary source of determining the manufacture
date of items. Halloween items are, by and large, difficult to accurately date
beyond a typical range of years. The Bogie Books help provide solid parameters
for the dating of Dennison products. (One note: many collectors assume the first
Bogie Book was issued in 1912. However, the very first was issued in 1909, with
a three season gap until the 1912 edition was released.)

Tin noisemakers
of an astonishing variety and ingenuity were made by a number of American firms.
Among the most sought after tin items are those made by Bugle Toy, a company
about which little is known. Other manufacturers included Chein, Kirchhof and T.
Cohn. You can find tambourines, clangers, rattlers, ratchets and so on. Earlier
tin items will have sculpted wooden handles, with later items or versions having
plastic handles.

The imagery of vintage Halloween items through the 1940s is compelling and memorable. The hierarchy of imagery has always been fairly logical: the pumpkin, or its more humanized incarnation, the Jack-O-Lantern, forms the bottom of the pyramid as the most common image. Ascending this pyramid, the middle layers would encompass black cats, skeletons and owls. The upper-most layers would consist of witches, veggie people and bats, with the pinnacle surely being occupied by devils. This means that within any given genre, devil imagery is the rarest to find. Although not always true, this rarity generally means that devil imagery commands very high prices. The imagery of the older Halloween pieces is significantly at odds with imagery common from the 1950s through today. This is certainly one of the most important factors escalating the prices for Halloween memorabilia. The imagery then was meant to provoke a reaction – generally a horrific one! The pieces were, in many instances, meant to scare. More recent Halloween imagery is, by and large, pedestrian, cute and dull. Since Halloween items are notoriously hard to accurately date, one rule of thumb I use is this: the scarier the imagery, the older the item!

The main factor behind the swift rise in prices since 1995 for vintage material is the true scarcity of display-quality items. Unlike Christmas decorations that almost always became heirlooms to be packed carefully away as the New Year dawned, Halloween decorations were generally used once at a party, and then discarded with no sentiment. Lanterns were designed to be illuminated by a flame that either consumed the lantern or made it undesirable for display. Die-cuts were often affixed to walls with liberal use of tape, which through the years causes damage affecting their display-worthiness. Games were designed so that in the playing of them, pieces would be torn from backing or cut away. Party table decorations would be scooped up by a tired host and thrown in the trash. Consequently, there is a true scarcity of quality, near-mint condition, vintage Halloween memorabilia.